Oregon
The grant’s primary purpose was to improve the quality assurance systems for waiver participants self-directing their services, with a particular focus on health, safety, and service satisfaction. The grant had four major goals: (1) to develop and support a consumer/stakeholder group to provide grant oversight and to assist with grant implementation, (2) to develop tools and procedures to help ensure health and safety and manage risk for in-home services recipients, (3) to design system-wide data collection and reporting processes that permit trend analysis and systems evaluation, and (4) to develop a detailed plan for project sustainability.
The grant was awarded to the Department of Human Services, Seniors and People with Disabilities (SPD).
Role of Key Partners -
The grant convened a Stakeholder Group comprising individuals receiving in-home waiver services and advocacy organizations representing a broad range of perspectives: local senior services agencies, the Support Service Brokerages, the Developmental Disabilities (DD) Council, the DD Coalition, Douglas County DD Services, the Home Care Commission, and Self-Advocates as Leaders. The Stakeholder Group contributed to the design, implementation, oversight, and evaluation of the project.
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Local administrative, case management, and service brokerage agencies contributed time and staff resources to complete field tests and assist with the evaluation of grant products.
Major Accomplishments and Outcomes -
A grant contractor and the Stakeholder Group developed a set of 11 quality indicators applicable to self-directed, in-home services across three service populations: people with developmental disabilities, people with physical disabilities, and older adults. The indicators provide a common foundation for measuring and reporting service quality throughout SPD, despite separate service delivery, planning, and advocacy systems.
Critical health and safety data already available in the State’s current information systems were identified, mapped, and assessed for applicability relative to the quality indicators. With information on each of these quality indicators gathered over time, SPD management will become knowledgeable about service system quality, and will be able to focus its improvement activities efficiently and effectively on specific problem areas.
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A grant contractor worked with SPD staff and members of the Stakeholder Group to develop a consumer satisfaction survey for individuals being served through three waiver programs: the In-home Comprehensive Services program and the Support Services Brokerages program (both serving people with developmental disabilities), and the Client-Employed Provider program (serving older adults and people with physical disabilities).
The project team field-tested the survey to obtain feedback for improving both the instrument and the methodology before final recommendations were submitted to SPD. They also tested a user-friendly, web-based prototype of the survey, which clearly indicated the limitations and benefits of an online survey for each service population.
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A grant contractor completed an assessment of existing information systems and made recommendations for an add-on program that can be incorporated into larger information system projects currently under way at SPD.
Enduring Systems Change -
The grant enabled SPD to improve its quality monitoring system by developing a consumer survey that (1) measures overall participant satisfaction with services and also provides participant perspective on how well supports meet health and safety needs and preferences, and (2) can be used across three waiver programs. SPD will administer a single consumer survey every 2 years to a statistically valid random sample of individuals who receive self-directed in-home supports (people with developmental disabilities, older adults, and people with physical disabilities). Because participation in the survey is not mandatory, the sample size has been tripled to account for a high no-response rate.
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The grant developed a personal safety and emergency management (PSEM) planning tool that participants can use to review critical issues, focus on the most likely risks, and plan measures to lessen those risks. The tool was designed for individuals who self-direct in-home services to decrease risks without compromising their authority and independence. The tool uses participant-friendly, noninstitutional language to help participants, their families, and others who help them plan and arrange supports to understand common risks and their implications. This understanding informs decision making about service planning and the need for specific steps to reduce risks.
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Contracted grant staff, in consultation with the Stakeholder Group, submitted a sustainability plan for including the grant’s quality improvement activities as part of SPD’s quality management strategy for waiver services. The plan identifies critical infrastructure components such as organizational design, technology and systems needs, and additional training and technical assistance needs for key program staff, as well as timelines for integrating the new processes and resources developed by the grant.
No new service contracts, administrative rules, or statutory changes are required to implement these quality improvement activities. Implementation of the PSEM tool is currently in process. The consumer satisfaction survey was conducted for people with developmental disabilities in 2007, and the survey was scheduled to be conducted for older adults and for people with physical disabilities in 2008.
Key Challenges -
Lack of state financial resources and insufficient field staff presented major challenges to implementing the grant as planned. Consequently, grant staff changed priorities and adapted procedures to reduce the impact of these constraints on the field tests of the consumer survey and the PSEM planning tool.
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An original grant goal was to develop a single information system solution that would allow SPD to integrate and report information about participant health and safety from information systems that were created when the three service populations were served by two different agencies. Soon after the grant project began, the Department of Human Services had the opportunity to replace its antiquated Medicaid Management Information System (MMIS) system, and all other cross-system work was shifted to a lower priority—both for budget/resource reasons and because solutions developed for the existing system would be moot when the MMIS project is completed.
However, the grant project’s mapping of the location of critical health, safety, and satisfaction data for three disability populations—and its identification of additional elements needed—will still serve as a valuable guide for designing features of either the new MMIS or supplementary systems compatible with the new MMIS.
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Identifying and working through perceived differences in the needs, preferences, and communication styles of each service population and service delivery system culture significantly slowed the development of the consumer satisfaction survey and the PSEM planning tool. Grant staff worked with the Stakeholder Group until agreement was achieved.
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Toward the end of the project, several major state initiatives competed for participants’ and advocates’ time, and it was difficult to maintain their participation in the grant’s consumer/stakeholder group after the consumer satisfaction survey and the PSEM tool were developed.
Continuing Challenges -
Oregon is currently developing and implementing a new Medicaid Management Information System, which will not be completed for several years, owing to unavoidable delays.
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Accumulating and analyzing data from various systems continues to be a challenge, as does distributing that information to various stakeholders.
Lessons Learned and Recommendations
States seeking to implement a single Quality Management System for multiple service delivery systems serving different populations are well advised to spend the time needed to engage all stakeholders in establishing priorities for the project prior to submitting a request for funding. When representatives of different service populations could not agree about design and implementation features, to get them back on track, grant staff found it helpful to remind them of their initial agreement about priorities.
Key Products
Technical Materials
The grant project produced two tools that are being incorporated into SPD processes: the Consumer Satisfaction Survey and Handling Emergencies: A Guide to Personal Safety and Emergency Management (both described above under Enduring Systems Change). The second tool is available at http://www.hsri.org/docs/PSEM_Guide.PDF.
Reports
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In-Home Quality Assurance Project: System Review and Initial Approach is an analysis of information system needs and a description of the prototype suggested to manage the integration of existing and new information. Because much of the information system that existed at the initiation of the grant subsequently became part of an MMIS improvement project, the report is not applicable in several areas but will be used to help shape revisions to the MMIS.
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SPD Consumer Survey for Use with Recipients of In-Home Services: Survey Development and Field Test Report describes the development and field test of the consumer survey, and provides recommendations regarding the survey questions and administration.
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Helping Individuals Prepare for Emergencies: Development and Testing of a Consumer Guide to Personal Safety and Emergency Management describes the development of the PSEM planning instrument, the field-test process, and provides recommendations regarding its use.
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Quality Assurance and Quality Improvement in Home and Community-Based Services: Final Report summarizes the tasks and activities of the grant project completed between May 2004 and September 2006, and describes project accomplishments according to tasks associated with each work component.
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